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Saturday, November 8, 2014

QATAR BUILDS WORLD CUP INFRASTRUCTURE WITH N. KOREAN SLAVE LABOR - It is estimated that Qatar's slave-like working conditions for migrant workers from poor countries will leave at least 4000 workers dead

North Korean labourers 'slaving 18 hours a day in Qatar to build World Cup city' - and their wages are used to fund Kim Jong-Un's extravagant lifestyle.
 
The Al-Khor stadium is one of many that Qatar plans to build for the 2022 Football World Cup
Future Al Khor stadium
  • North Korean labourers' conditions described as akin to modern day slavery
  • The men work 18 hours a day and their pay is sent back to Kim Jong-Un
  • Many are under the impression they will collect it upon their return
  • The labourers are working on Qatar's infrastructure for World Cup 2022
  • This includes an 86,000 seater stadium with solar powered cooling system

  • Thousands of North Korean labourers are working 18 hours a day to build Qatar's football world cup infrastructure while their wages are directly siphoned off to fund Kim Jong-Un's regime. 
     
    The men, who are told they've been awarded the privilege of serving the dictator abroad, must meet strict criteria in order to be eligible to work overseas.  This includes showing loyalty to the dictator's political party, having money to bribe migrant officials, and having a wife and children in order to dissuade defection.
     
    Read more of this article and others denouncing Qatar's habit of using slave labor.
    Qatar regime is a close friend of the US White House.

     
    The conditions the men work under has been described as a modern form of slavery - they start work at 6am and do not finish until midnight - working under the illusion their pay will be available to collect when they return home, The Guardian reported.
     
    The Qatar government said there were 2,800 North Koreans registered to work on Qatar's Lusail City.
     
    To be finished in time for the 2022 Football World Cup, it will be home to more than a quarter of a million residents and be capable of hosting tens of thousands more at its array of luxury hotels.
     
    It is formed by four islands and includes two luxury marinas - they will include a giraffe zoo, a snow park and a Six Flags amusement park, light rail network, two golf courses and a 86,000 seat stadium with a solar powered cooling system.
     
    However, the manner by which this stunning architectural design is achieved remains dogged by accusations the nation is using an army of modern day slaves.
     
    The Guardian reported one worker said he was paid nothing - with all earnings going back to North Korea where he believed he would be reimbursed upon his return.
     
    A more senior worker said he was paid the equivalent of £250 a month and the rest would be available for him to collect when he returned home.
     
    Choi Yunchul, a North Korean defector, told the paper: 'In the early 90s, workers did receive their salary but it has been stopped since the mid-90s. The construction company that employed workers sent all the money directly to the North Korean government's bank account.'
     
    Aidan McQuade, Anti-Slavery International director, said the conditions under which the labourers were working constituted slave labour.
     
    He said: 'It is simply a further dreadful indictment of the dictatorship in Pyongyang, which exploits the vulnerability of its citizens to enrich itself in collusion with the Qatari autocracy.'
     
    Qatar's drive to construct stadiums and infrastructure capable of hosting a massive international event such as the world cup has been dogged by scandals.
     
    Only late last month was it was forced to refute claims that money for British firms working on the World Cup venues was being siphoned off to ISIS extremists.
     
    The Commons was told British firms awarded contracts for the project in Qatar were being short-changed while some of the unpaid cash had ended up in the hands of the Islamic extremists in Syria.
     
    But Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Nasser bin Khalifa Al Thani told MailOnline it was a ’serious allegation’ which the government ’refutes completely’.
     
    He said: ’Let me be clear, for the avoidance of doubt, we will stand shoulder to shoulder with our allies in the Middle East and around the world to face down the terrorist threat.
     
    Source
     
     
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
     
    The Guardian's article exposing Qatar's use of North Korean slaves
     
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
     
    September article about Qatar World Cup slaves from impoverished parts of the world. 
     
    The Guardian exclusive:
     
    Abuse and exploitation of migrant workers
     preparing emirate for 2022
     
    World Cup construction 
    'will leave 4000 migrant workers dead'
     
    According to documents obtained from the Nepalese embassy in Doha, at least 44 workers died between 4 June and 8 August. More than half died of heart attacks, heart failure or workplace accidents.
     
    The investigation also reveals:
    Evidence of forced labour on a huge World Cup infrastructure project.
    • Some Nepalese men have alleged that they have not been paid for months and have had their salaries retained to stop them running away.
    • Some workers on other sites say employers routinely confiscate passports and refuse to issue ID cards, in effect reducing them to the status of illegal aliens.
    Some labourers say they have been denied access to free drinking water in the desert heat.
    • About 30 Nepalese sought refuge at their embassy in Doha to escape the brutal conditions of their employment.

    The allegations suggest a chain of exploitation leading from poor Nepalese villages to Qatari leaders. The overall picture is of one of the richest nations exploiting one of the poorest to get ready for the world's most popular sporting tournament.


    Read more

     
     
    RELATED
     
    White House cozy with Qatar, sells them $11 billion in armaments
    although Qatar is well known for financing and arming terrorists in the Middle East, including ISIS and Hamas.  The US government's indirect way of arming Hamas terrorists who kill Jews.
    Read more
     
    More on Qatar on this blog
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